The Thunder and Spurs Are Built to Battle for the Next Decade

Victor Wembanyama of the San Antonio Spurs dunks the ball against Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the second quarter in Game 1 of the NBA Western Conference Finals on Monday. (Joshua Gateley / Getty Images)
The Spurs and Thunder aren’t just battling for a trip to the NBA Finals; they’re launching what could become the league’s defining rivalry of the next decade.

Monday night in Oklahoma City, the two best teams in the NBA played until the building ran out of clock ... twice. Victor Wembanyama dropped 41 points and 24 rebounds. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander answered with 24 points and 12 assists, willing the defending champions to stay in it. They traded punches through regulation. Then through a first overtime. Then a second. When it was finally over, the San Antonio Spurs walked out of Paycom Center with a 122-115 win and a 1-0 series lead.

The place was stunned. The league was locked in. And that was only Game 1.

Three years ago, the Spurs were a punchline. A franchise in full rebuild mode, tanking its way to Wembanyama while the rest of the league watched and waited to see if the hype was real. Meanwhile, the Oklahoma City Thunder were doing what they always do: quietly assembling pieces, drafting well, and letting Gilgeous-Alexander drag them into relevance while the big-market teams looked the other way.

Fast-forward to May 2026, and the two best teams in the NBA are staring each other down in the Western Conference Finals. SGA just won his second consecutive MVP award. Wembanyama, who publicly pleaded his case for why HE was this season's MVP and may have felt motivated after his counterpart hoist the trophy in his face ahead of Game 1, won the Defensive Player of the Year award unanimously. The conversation isn't whether this series matters; it's whether the rest of the league even has a prayer of stopping what's coming.

Because here's the thing: Monday night wasn't just a playoff game. It was the opening act.

How We Got Here

The Thunder went 64-18 this season. The Spurs went 62-20. That's the first time two 62-win teams have met in the playoffs since the 1998 NBA Finals, when Michael Jordan dropped the most famous shot in basketball history over Bryon Russell. The company this series keeps tells you everything you need to know about what we're watching.

Oklahoma City has been the alpha of the West for two years now. They won the championship in 2025, and rather than take a step back the way most repeat contenders do, they got better. SGA is operating at a different altitude these days -- he won this year's NBA MVP by 73 first-place votes over Nikola Jokić. Let that sink in for a second. In a league with Jokić, Giannis, and a 22-year-old alien in San Antonio, SGA lapped the field.

But the Spurs spent this regular season doing something nobody saw coming: They owned the Thunder. San Antonio went 4-1 against OKC in 2025-26, including a stretch in December where they beat them three times in a matter of weeks. They had the Thunder figured out before the Thunder had time to adjust. That doesn't happen to Mark Daigneault's team. It just doesn't. And yet, here we are.

Game 1 felt like a continuation of exactly that. The Spurs dominated the paint — 52 points inside to OKC's 38 — crashed the offensive glass relentlessly, and converted 15 offensive rebounds into 13 second-chance points. OKC kept punching back, and Caruso's ridiculous performance kept it close, but San Antonio had an answer every time the Thunder threatened to pull away.

The Matchups That Change Everything

The easy headline is SGA vs. Wembanyama. And yes, that matchup is everything. Two of the three best players on the planet, operating on opposite ends of what basketball can look like at its highest level. SGA is artistry and efficiency at guard. Wembanyama is a 7-foot-4 science experiment who blocks shots from angles that shouldn't be physically possible and then steps back and drains a 3 on the other end.

But the reason this rivalry has legs isn't just the two stars. It's the rosters around them.

Look at OKC. Chet Holmgren. Jalen Williams. Ajay Mitchell, who emerged as a legitimate weapon while Williams was out with a hamstring injury. Cason Wallace. Lu Dort. And then there's Alex Caruso, who on Monday reminded everyone that he can completely take over a game off the bench by scoring 31 points, 8-of-14 from deep. This team doesn't have a weak link, and they play with a level of trust and cohesion that takes years to build. They are a machine.

Now look at San Antonio. Stephon Castle and Dylan Harperare 21 and 20, respectively, and already making cases for why they should start in a playoff series. Harper, in particular, was extraordinary Monday night — 24 points, 11 rebounds, and seven steals in double overtime on the road. That's not a kid finding his footing. That's a star announcing himself. De'Aaron Fox, who sat Game 1 with right ankle soreness, is the savvy NBA veteran who steadies the whole thing. And surrounding all of them is Wembanyama, who isn't just the best player on the floor most nights; he's the reason every offensive possession looks a little different, every shot chart skews a little weird, and every defensive scheme requires a new answer.

The Spurs became the first team in NBA history to win a playoff series with three different players aged 22 or younger, each leading them in scoring at least once. Think about that. They eliminated the Timberwolves with Castle, Harper, and Wemby all having their moments, each stepping up when it mattered. That's not luck. That's something.

What the Regular Season Told Us

Oklahoma City's Achilles' heel this season, to the extent they had one, was the Spurs. San Antonio figured out how to push pace against a Thunder defense that doesn't allow it. Fox, Castle, and Harper were consistently beating OKC into the paint in transition, something essentially nobody else was doing against the best transition defense in the league. The Spurs were also limiting Wembanyama's 3-point attempts against OKC (13% of his attempts against them, versus 32% against the rest of the league), forcing the Thunder to make different calculations on every possession.

That's not an accident. That's scouting. That's a coaching staff in Mitch Johnson — himself a Coach of the Year finalist — that had a plan and executed it. The flip side is that OKC is 8-0 in these playoffs and counting. They swept the Suns. They swept the Lakers. They're not exactly bleeding right now. Oh, and they added Jalen Williams back in Game 1 to the rotation after sitting out the last six games with a hamstring injury.

That matters enormously. Williams put up 26 on Monday night and gives the Thunder another high-level shot creator and a switchable defender capable of going body-to-body with Castle, Harper, and Fox. OKC's already terrifying lineup just got more dangerous. And yet, even with Williams, even with Caruso going nuclear from three, even with SGA running the show, San Antonio still found a way to win on the road in double overtime.

How Daigneault adjusts, and whether the Spurs' defensive game plan holds up for a full series, is the central question going forward.

Why This Is Just Getting Started

Both rosters are young. Both stars are in their primes or barely approaching them. SGA is 27. Wembanyama is 22. Castle, Harper, Williams, Mitchell, Holmgren — almost all of them are under 25. There is no natural expiration date here. No aging superstar is being squeezed for one last run. This is a rivalry that will be going strong in 2030 and probably beyond.

And the front offices running these things? They may be the two best in the league.

Sam Presti has quietly assembled one of the most ridiculous collections of draft capital in NBA history. Even after spending picks to acquire Jared McCain at the trade deadline, OKC still holds first-round picks in 2026, 2028, 2029, 2030, and 2031, along with a mountain of second-rounders stretching all the way to 2032. They have the 12th and 17th picks in this year's draft alone, and who's to stop Presti from packaging them to move up rather than sit put? The guy turned a 2021 draft night into Holmgren, Jalen Williams, and Jaylin Williams. He traded up in 2023 and landed Cason Wallace, who is now the sixth man on a championship team.

Brian Wright in San Antonio has been quietly just as impressive, and his fingerprints are all over what the Spurs are building. He went out and got Fox without giving up Castle, Wembanyama, or even Devin Vassell, a trade that had the rest of the NBA rubbing its eyes. The Spurs came out of that deal still sitting on 36 future draft picks over the next seven seasons, the most of any team in the league. That's more ammunition than OKC. They have unprotected Hawks picks, swap rights with Sacramento, swap rights tied to Boston, and second-round picks coming from seemingly everywhere. San Antonio's cap situation stays manageable through 2029, even if Castle and Harper both get max extensions. Wright has built this team with room to grow, room to maneuver, and room to make a run at a player if the right deal ever presents itself.

Two small-market teams with generational stars and front offices that never stop working. That's not a recipe for one good run; that's a recipe for a decade of this.

The Western Conference hasn't had a true defining rivalry since the Warriors ran roughshod over everyone. Before that, it was the Spurs themselves putting together a dynasty that lasted two decades, with different looks and rosters but the same foundation. The league craves this. A legitimate, high-level, evenly-matched rivalry with generational talent on both sides.

The Thunder and the Spurs are delivering it right now, in real time -- one double OT instant classic at a time. Whoever wins this series will be favored to cut down the nets in June. And whoever loses will spend the summer sharpening their swords for the next one.

Because if Game 1 told us anything, this rivalry isn’t going anywhere, and the next chapter is already inevitable.

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MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Tuesday, May 19

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This week carries extra weight for me with more on the line, as these home run picks will also go head-to-head with Covers’ Jon Metler in our weekly betting challenge on the Pickoff. There are some strong spots on the board today for both home runs and MLB player props.

For this slate, I’m locking in Christian Walker to do damage in Minneapolis against Zebby Matthews and a vulnerable Twins bullpen. I’m pairing him with earlier plays on Jo Adell and Kody Clemens as part of the card.

These are my favorite MLB home run predictions for Tuesday, May 19. 

  • UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Angels Jo Adell+350
Twins Kody Clemens+499
Astros Christian Walker+445
💲Today's HR parlay+13343

Home run pick: Jo Adell (+350)

If you're betting home runs today, the Los Angeles Angels should be on your card.

A's lefty Jacob Lopez ranks as one of the worst starters on the board with a bottom-50 HR/FB rate and the sixth-worst xFIP among MLB starters. He has allowed multiple home runs in three straight games, right-handed hitters own eight of the 10 homers he has surrendered this year, and he’s backed by a bullpen that gives up home runs at a Bottom-7 rate.

There were a few names worth considering, but I’m landing on Jo Adell, who should hit higher in the order today against the lefty. All six of his home runs this season have come against southpaws, along with a .993 OPS.

Mike Trout(+360) and Zach Neto (+460) were two other names I looked at in a great matchup with 75-degree temperatures and winds blowing out at Angel Stadium.

  • Time: 9:38 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ABTV, NBCS-California

Home run pick: Kody Clemens (+499)

With the absences of Byron Buxton and now Ryan Jeffers, Kody Clemens becomes the target for the Minnesota Twins in arguably the best home run matchup on the board today against Lance McCullers Jr., who I have ranked as the worst starter on the slate. He has been giving up long balls, struggling with command, and his BlastContact numbers, along with his HR/FB rate, suggest more damage is on the way.

Clemens hasn’t been putting up Buxtonian numbers, but nobody has. He does have five extra-base hits over his last five games, including a homer, and profiles as the left-handed bat to target against McCullers, who has been giving up home runs to lefties along with a .876 OPS.

The bonus is a Houston Astros bullpen that sits dead last in ERA on the season and has thrown the fourth-most innings. It could also be without two right-handed relievers in A.J. Blubaugh and Jayden Murray.

If McCullers can’t get deep, Jason Alexander and his 14.21 ERA may be forced to eat innings. Finally, 14-mph winds blowing out to center should help both sides in a game that could easily feature four-plus home runs.

  • Time: 7:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Twins.TV, Space City Home Network

Home run pick: Christian Walker (+445)

I need to stay in Minnesota and get some Houston HR shares. Zebby Matthews is a prime candidate for regression after getting promoted off shaky Triple-A numbers and then getting a bit of luck in his season debut last week.

He profiles as a home-run-prone arm in a spot with double-digit winds blowing out, and he’s backed by a bullpen that has already thrown nine innings using eight different arms over the last two days and could be without three or four key relievers today. The Twins' bullpen sits near the bottom of the league in ERA on the season.

Christian Walker already has nearly a dozen home runs on the year and is tracking toward a 30-HR season. His BlastContact metrics over the last two weeks are comparable to Yordan Alvarez, and this is the kind of price I want in a game that could give pitchers whiplash from start to finish.

  • Time: 7:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Twins.TV, Space City Home Network
Josh Inglis' 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 13-77, -9.94 units

Today’s HR parlay

Angels Jo Adell Bet Now
+13343
Twins Kody Clemens
Astros Christian Walker

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Alex Caruso shoves camera out of his face during tense Thunder moment in crushing Game 1 loss to Spurs

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Alex Caruso pushing a camera away from a basketball huddle, Image 2 shows Caruso shoves a camera away from the huddle during a basketball game
Alex Caruso camera

Next time Alex Caruso is on the bench, please no photos.

During a tense moment in a thrilling Game 1 that featured a career-best game from Caruso — but an even better one from Victor Wembanyama as the Spurs won 122-115 to take a 1-0 series lead in the Wester Conference finals — the veteran Thunder guard bizarrely shoved away a cameraman.

At the end of regulation with the teams tied at 101-101, Wembanyama had a chance to win the game with a layup when Chet Holmgren came flying in for a block to extend the game.

Alex Caruso shoves away the camera at the end of regulation.

As a camera person came over to the Thunder bench to capture the team as it readied for overtime, Caruso aggressively pushed the camera away.

A second hand — belonging to someone wearing something blue — also blocked the camera moments later before the shot shifted to Wembanyama.

It is unclear why Caruso reacted the way he did.

Caruso had a monster Game 1, tallying 31 points on 11-of-19 shooting, including 8-of-14 from 3-point range.

He was also tasked with guarding Wembanyama for most of the game despite being a foot shorter than the Spurs’ 7-foot-4 center.

Wembanyama put up one of the best performances in basketball history Monday night, playing 49 minutes and going 14-for-25 from the field with 41 points, 24 rebounds and three blocks.

He also drilled a 3-pointer from 30 feet at the end of the first overtime to tie the game at 108-108, just as it looked like Oklahoma City had finally put San Antonio away.

Chet Holmgren made a critical block to send the game to overtime.

“Wemby played 48 minutes, had 41 points, 24 rebounds and 3 blocks, changed 20 other shots and made a must-make 30 footer from the Curry spot, and by the end of the game the OKC fans looked like they’d just been strip-searched — anyway he’s our player of the game,” Ringer founder Bill Simmons posted on X after the shocking Game 1.

Game 2 on Wednesday will be nearly must-win for the Thunder as they attempt to slow down Wembanyama, who looked unstoppable Monday night.

Texas baseball pledge Brody Bumila fans 14 batters in Bishop Feehan’s latest win

Bishop Feehan's Brody Bumila, a Raynham resident, tosses a pitch during a non-league game against Taunton on April 23, 2026.

The Attleboro (MA) Bishop Feehan High School baseball team is nearing the end of the regular season and has already qualified for the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) postseason behind the left arm of Texas commit Brody Bumila.

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Up against Westwood (Mass.) Xaverian Brothers on Monday night, the Shamrocks’ ace pitcher had another masterpiece before the game went to extra innings. Bumila went nearly seven innings, allowing just one mere hit and struck out 14 batters during his time on the mound. Bishop Feehan ended up winning the contest 5-4 over Xaverian Brothers in 11 innings.

About a week and a half ago, Bumila had his best game of the 2026 Massachusetts high school baseball season, pitching a complete game no hitter and struck out a program-best 20 batters in a 5-1 win over Moses Brown.

The left-handed pitcher committed to the University of Texas baseball back in October of 2024 and is widely expected to be a potential first round draft selection in this summer’s 2026 MLB Draft. Last season Bumila appeared in eight games for Bishop Feehan, batting .296 at the plate, driving in eight runs and two doubles.

There’s been several impressive performances on the mound this season by Bumila for Bishop Feehan. Back in early April in a 6-5 loss to Hopkinton, Bumila returned to the mound for two innings of work and struck out all six batters he faced on 20 pitches. Per reporters on hand for the contest, Bumila reached up to 100 miles per hour on his pitches.

Later on in mid-April, Bumila pitched four perfect innings in a 3-0 win over St. John’s. The victory is the first earned for Bumila on the season after the pitcher went four innings, allowed no hits, runs or walks, striking out nine on 54 pitches, with 35 going for strikes.

Bishop Feehan improved to 14-8 on the season and has two remaining regular season games left versus Attleboro and Taunton, respectively.

Box Grades: San Antonio strikes first in dramatic OT win

May 18, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Devin Vassell (24) blocks a shot by Oklahoma City Thunder center Chet Holmgren (7) in double overtime during game one of the western conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

WOW. What an incredible way to start this series, and what a statement game from Wemby. Furthermore, even though this game was close, it was actually characterized by some HUGE box score differentials for each team. In other words, this wasn’t a game in which the Spurs collected the win by registering lots of tiny margins; rather, San Antonio won because their big box scores wins slightly outshined OKC’s. Let’s dig into the details:

Note: Now that we’ve moved into the postseason, the reference period used for grading changes from the set of regular season games since 2012-2013 to the set of postseason games since 2012-2013. Unless otherwise noted below, this set DOES include play-in games. As of the end of May 18, 2026, this group include 1,191 games.

Factors that decided the game

  • The battle for offensive opportunity in this game was characterized by big rebounding and turnover differentials. On the one hand, the Spurs enjoyed excellent DRB and ORB margins of +15 and +6, respectively. However, OKC had eight fewer turnovers, which played a big role in mitigating the advantage in offensive opportunity that San Antonio might otherwise have gained.
  • The Thunder actually outscored the Spurs from the field; both teams made exactly 41 shots, but OKC logged four more made threes, resulting in a point differential from the field of -4 for San Antonio.
  • Ultimately, the free throw line played a massive role in this game. The Thunder committed seven more fouls than San Antonio, which gave the Spurs an excellent FTA margin of +10. Furthermore, the Spurs were a fantastic 27-of-29 in their attempts, and consequently outscored OKC by 11 from the charity stripe.

Rare Box Score Stats

  • As you can imagine, Wemby’s stat line from last night doesn’t grow on trees. Let’s go over some of the most notable elements:
    • First of of all, since the 1996-1997 postseason, no other player has recorded 41+ points and 24+ rebounds in a true playoff game.
    • Over the same period, Victor’s performance last night was the just the 11th time that a player logged 24+ rebounds in a game, and only the third time that a player has done so with 15+ defensive rebounds and 9+ offensive boards.
    • Finally, only one other player has recorded 40+ points, 20+ rebounds, and 3+ blocks in a true playoff game since the 1996-1997 postseason. That player is Shaquille O’Neal, and he did it three times.
  • Now let’s turn to the team box score. For all stats below, the reference period is all postseason games since the start of the 2012-2013 postseason (1,191 games in total):
    • San Antonio logged just the second team performance by a winner or loser that included 27+ made free throws on no more than 29 attempts. Interestingly, the only other time during this period was a 99-111 Dallas loss to Houston on April 21, 2015.
    • Steals and blocks were a dime a dozen in this game. In fact, only 7 other games during the period have included at least 40 stocks (steals + blocks).
    • On the theme of stocks, there have been only five other contests during the period in which a winner had 18+ stocks and a negative stock differential.
    • Only 21 other winners have logged FGM and 3PM differentials no better than +0 and -4, respectively.
    • This is just the 33rd time that a winning team has recorded a TRB margin of +21, and just the 7th time that a winner combined such a good TRB margin with a FGA differential of -5 or worse.
    • Only 12 other winners have had 23+ turnovers.
    • This contest marked the 47th time that a winner has had at least eight more turnovers than its opponent, and just the second time that a winner has had such a bad TOV margin when their opponent had at least 15 turnovers.
    • Somewhat frustratingly, the Spurs have now logged 8+ more turnovers than their opponent THREE times during this playoff run; however, they have won each of those games, so maybe this just works for them!

What are Team Graded Box Scores?

Very briefly, these box scores grade winner-loser differentials for basic box score statistics, with the grade being based on the winning team’s differential relative to other NBA winners during a defined reference period. Think of it like a report card for understanding how a given winner performed relative to other winners. The reference period used runs from the start of the 2012-2013 season to the latest date of play, including only games in the same season category (i.e., regular season and playoff games are not compared to each other).

Data Source: The underlying data used to create these box scores was collected from Basketball Reference. In all cases, the data are collected the morning after the game is played. Although rare, postgame statistical revisions after data collection do occur and may affect the results after the fact.

Thoughts on a 7-6 Rangers loss

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 18: Ezequiel Duran #20 of the Texas Rangers hits a 2 RBI single against the Colorado Rockies during the eighth inning at Coors Field on May 18, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Rockies 7, Rangers 6

  • Sometimes, you gotta mix it up a little, just to keep people on their toes.
  • Take the Rangers, for example.
  • The Rangers have gotten us used to close losses where the Ranger pitchers do their job, but the offense lets them down.
  • You do that often enough, though, and it becomes rote. Routine. Unremarkable.
  • So sometimes, you want to have a game where the offense does good things, but the Rangers still lose by one due to lousy pitching, with some crappy defense mixed in.
  • And thus we have this display.
  • Texas was down 6-1 after four, with MacKenzie Gore allowing two runs in the first (and being lucky it was only two), then being replaced by Peyton Gray for the second due to left lat tightness.
  • It was like 40 degrees in Denver and rainy, so if you’ve got a pitch with tightness or whatever, get him out of the game. It just would’ve been nice if Gore hadn’t been bad in his limited amount of work.
  • Gray ended up allowing four runs in his 2.2 innings, with two of those being directly attributable to the defense, with an Ezequiel Duran throwing error and a Josh Jung booted ball leading to two unearned runs.
  • Gavin Collyer ended up allowing the final Rockies run in the sixth, which made it what was then a 7-3 game. That run, as it turned out, was kind of important.
  • If Corey Seager is going to be on the injured list, its at least helpful for Justin Foscue to hit like Seager.
  • In what we could have called the Justin Foscue Game, had the Rangers pulled off the comeback, the forgotten 2020 first rounder went 3 for 3, drew a walk, and was a triple shy of a cycle.
  • Ezequiel Duran, who is technically filling in for Seager at shortstop, while Foscue fills in for Duran at second, where Duran has been filling in for Josh Smith, also had three hits. The two combined for six of the ten hits the Rangers had on the day.
  • A big, come-from-behind win was in the Rangers’ grasp on Monday. With three runs already in in the inning, Texas had runners on second and third with two outs, but Kyle Higashioka fouled out to end the inning. Jake Burger singled to bring the go-ahead run to the plate in the ninth, but Danny Jansen popped out to end the inning.
  • I think I’d rather have the hope of a comeback falling short, rather than never come back at all.
  • Others may differ.
  • Sometimes I will wake up in the morning after a Rangers loss, pull up B-R, look at the standings, and think to myself, hey, the Rangers’ record is a little better than I was thinking it was.
  • And then I will realize that B-R just hasn’t updated the standings page yet.
  • The Rangers are three games under .500, though they are still just a game back in the American League West, because the American League West is ass.
  • The Athletics of Sacramento are still in first place, and still just a game up on the Rangers, because they also lost on Monday.
  • Their loss was in a fashion that would be horrific if it happened to us, but which we can laugh at because it happened to a rival.
  • The A’s, playing at Anaheim, went into the 9th with the score tied 0-0, and with J.T. Ginn throwing a no-hitter. The A’s scored a run in the top of the ninth, finally giving them the lead, and Ginn, at 99 pitches, was going to get the chance to close it out.
  • Adam Frazier led off the bottom of the ninth with a single, busting up the no-hitter.
  • Zach Neto then hit a walk off homer.
  • Game over, Athletics.
  • Like I said, the American League West is ass.
  • MacKenzie Gore topped out at 95 mph with his fastball, averaging 94.1 mph, which is 1.3 mph below his average for the season. Peyton Gray’s fastball touched 92.3 mph. Jalen Beeks hit 93.2 mph with his fastball. Gavin Collyer’s sinker maxed out at 96.6 mph. Cole Winn’s fastball hit 95.9 mph. Jakob Junis reached 94.3 mph with his sinker.
  • Justin Foscue had a 105.3 mph double, a 103.9 mph home run, and a 102.5 mph double. Ezequiel Duran has a 102.1 mph single. Josh Jung had a 100.7 mph double and a 100.3 mph ground out.
  • Its bounceback time, baby. Rangers gonna win on Tuesday.

Best NRFI Bets Today: No Run First Inning Predictions for MLB May 19

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The Baltimore Orioles visit the Tampa Bay Rays again tonight, and that matchup will headline my favorite MLB picks today for the "no run first inning" and "yes run first inning" markets.

Here are my best NRFI and YRFI picks for Tuesday, May 19. 

Best NRFI/YRFI bets today

PickOdds
Orioles/Rays - NRFI-122
Guardians/Tigers - NRFI-122
Brewers/Cubs - NRFI-127

Orioles at Rays: NRFI (-122)

The Baltimore Orioles and Tampa Bay Rays continue a three-game set tonight after a massive 16-6 blowout for the Rays on Monday. While Tampa has scored in the first inning in two straight contests, they're up against Kyle Bradish here, who owns a perfect 9-0 NRFI/YRFI record this year. His 4.60 ERA doesn't jump off the page, but Bradish seldom gets into trouble in the opening frame. 

As for the Rays, they send Griffin Jax to the mound. He has a respectable 3.91 ERA, and the right-hander hasn't given up a single run in the first inning across four 2026 outings. The Orioles have also come across the plate in the first just eight times in 48 games. 

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MASN, Rays.TV

Guardians at Tigers: NRFI (-122)

It's a solid pitching matchup on the mound tonight when the Cleveland Guardians take on the Detroit Tigers. Parker Messick has compiled a 2.35 ERA, and he has a perfect 9-0 NRFI/YRFI record.Keider Montero, meanwhile, sports a 3.65 ERA, and he hasn't surrendered a run in the opening inning of any of his eight starts. 

The Guards have been held scoreless in the first inning in three of their last four contests, while Detroit has also failed to score a run in the first inning in three of their last four. The Tigers are also hitting just .217 against left-handed pitchers. 

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Detroit SportsNet, Guardians.TV

Brewers at Cubs: NRFI (-127)

The Milwaukee Brewers and Chicago Cubs meet tonight, and it's another intriguing encounter on the hill. Jacob Misiorowski has been lights out with a 2.12 ERA, and he's tossed four straight scoreless first innings. The righty has also only allowed a run in the opening frame twice this season.

As for the Cubbies, they hand the ball to Ben Brown, who has looked impressive since stepping into the rotation, keeping opponents at bay in the first inning in both of his starts.

The Brew Crew is hitting just .214 in the first inning, and they've failed to score in three straight first innings. The Cubbies have been held scoreless in 39 of their 48 games this season, and they're also batting a pedestrian .219 in the first. 

  • Time: 7:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Marquee Sports Network, Brewers.TV
Quinn Allen's 2026 Transparency Record
  • NRFI/YRFI picks: 8-15, -1.90 units

What is a NRFI bet?

NRFI (No Run First Inning) and YRFI (Yes Run First Inning) bets add a thrilling twist to the start of an MLB game. A NRFI bet is a wager that no runs will be scored in the first inning. You're betting that the starting pitchers for both teams will get through the first inning without allowing any runs, whether by striking out batters, inducing ground balls, or through solid defensive play.

A YRFI bet is the exact opposite. You're betting that at least one run will be scored in the first inning. In this case, you’re hoping for an early offensive burst such as a leadoff walk, a timely hit, or even a home run.

NRFI and YRFI bets add excitement to the early part of a game and offer immediate gratification for bettors looking for a quick resolution.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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The Sixers have their issues, but the 2025-26 group was resilient

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 10: Joel Embiid #21, Dalen Terry #14 and Trendon Watford #12 of the Philadelphia 76ers talk during the fourth quarter in Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs against the New York Knicks at Xfinity Mobile Arena on May 10, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Undoing the goodwill of a 3-1 series comeback to beat your biggest rival in a playoff series for the first time in nearly 45 years is hard to do, yet it feels like the Sixers did so in the span of a week.

Getting thoroughly trounced in the second round by the New York Knicks — setting a record for most 30+ point losses in a playoff run in the process — made the fanbase lose the “house money” mentality they were treating the postseason with during the Boston series.

The result of this season was just another in what’s become a long line of second-round exits, but the 2025-26 Sixers showed more fight, heart and camaraderie than any team of the Joel Embiid era. To some extent, their efforts should be celebrated.

With ownership feeling the need for a front office change after the season, it just shows how hard this group had to fight to accomplish what they did. They had to deal with Embiid again being available for less than half the games, a Paul George suspension just as they were gaining momentum, and a front office that not only ignored the team’s plea to improve at the trade deadline, but shipped off a popular young player in the locker room for no player in return.

Through it all, the Sixers were able to win 45 games, make the playoffs and beat a team that won over 50 games in a series for the first time in Embiid’s career.

Every step of the way, the players would cite the resiliency of the group — a cliche that gets thrown around a lot, but not a quality many Embiid-led Sixers teams have had after years of constant roster turnover. Ironically, it was during the disastrous 24-win season where it felt like that element was there for the Sixers. It just took an extra year and retaining 11 players from that team for it to translate to wins.

“You know what’s funny? Our chemistry off the court last year wasn’t bad, like we like each other,” Tyrese Maxey said after a win in January. “I think the biggest thing is we’re healthy. I think we got to the space where it doesn’t matter who’s on the court.”

That chemistry made a noticeable difference in what they were able to accomplish. They became the first group in franchise history to come back from a 3-1 deficit in a playoff series. While they were doing so, guys like Maxey made sure to shoutout the guys who weren’t getting playing time in that series, but were being a great support system on the bench.

When he went on the radio to discuss his report that Daryl Morey and Nick Nurse’s jobs may be in jeopardy, Tony Jones of the Athletic said, “… if you knew some of the stuff they went through internally, I honestly thought it was amazing they won 45 games. This wasn’t a smooth year, but I also think it definitely shows how much this group likes each other.”

The conclusive defeat to New York showed how far this current Sixers roster is from truly competing for a title. Now that the offseason is here, there’s plenty of time to debate the best way to try to get back to that, but it’s important to remember no one had expectations in that ballpark before the start of the season. No one, this blog included, knew what to make of their preseason over/under win total.

At the beginning of the year, any fan would have signed up for a season that both netted a record over .500 and Embiid feeling like he has his left knee situation figured out. They would have been over the moon at the prospect of a VJ Edgecombe rookie season so promising he started every game he appeared in and was a major contributor in wins — and one that culminated in a 23-point performance in Game 7 against the Celtics.

The existential threats of Embiid and George’s contracts make it harder to get excited about a Maxey-Edgecombe led future. The fact that those two guards aren’t exactly on the same timeline makes it tricky as well. The next president of basketball operations the team brings in will have their work cut out for them, but this year’s team showed how much easier it is to watch a team that both fights and cares.

Jets' Josh Morrissey Places 34th in The Hockey News' Top 100 Rankings

The Hockey News has opened its full archive to subscribers, giving fans access to 76 years of hockey history, feature stories, and unforgettable moments. In the latest issue, we rank the NHL’s top 100 players, with Winnipeg Jets standout defenseman Josh Morrissey coming in No. 34th overall. Here is a free preview featuring players ranked 32 through 36.

Subscribe today to see where other standout Winnipeg players, including Mark Scheifele, Connor Hellebuyck and Kyle Connor landed on the list, explore the complete top 100 rankings, and dive into the full THN Archives

Also, go to thn.com/free to subscribe.

Top 100 NHL Players: 32-36 - Apr. 17 2026 - Vol. 79 Issue 10

32 TAGE THOMPSON

POS: C | AGE: 28 | LY: 65

Thompson might be one of the NHL’s skinniest players, but he has one of the heaviest shots. He’s not Alex Ovechkin, but his snipe from the left circle on the power play is just as feared as Ovi’s. His long reach is an asset in both defending and protecting the puck, and his quick release makes him dangerous in the scoring areas.

33 MATTHEW SCHAEFER

POS: D | AGE: 18 | LY: N/A

Every superlative has already been used on the rookie defenseman, who is a lock for the Calder thanks to an exceptional two-way game and incredible skating. So how about this? With eight games in hand, Schaefer passed fellow Islanders No. 1 pick John Tavares – a center – on New York’s rookie-points leaderboard.

34 JOSH MORRISSEY

POS: D | AGE: 31 | LY: 23

Morrissey doesn’t have next-level flash or dominant physical attributes, but his smarts separate him from the pack. His presence is metronomic in Winnipeg; he makes the entire Jets on-ice operation truly tick. He passed Dustin Byfuglien to become the highest-scoring D-man in franchise history with an OT-winner in March.

35 COLE CAUFIELD

POS: LW | AGE: 25 | LY: 66

Some guys feast on empty calories. Caufield is not one of those guys. His 29 go-ahead goals led the league, as did his five overtime goals. The NHL is a better place when the Canadiens have a 50-goal scorer in their lineup, and Caufield did just that when he scored in a winning effort against Tampa Bay on April 9.

36 FILIP GUSTAVSSON

POS: G | AGE: 27 | LY: 74

Outside of Minnesota, Gustavsson is underrated. Aside from 2023-24, a rare blemish on his record, he has shown he has a rare attribute among keepers: consistency. Among goalies to play 100 games over the past two seasons, only Andrei Vasilevskiy and Connor Hellebuyck have better save percentages than Gustavsson

Image

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Lakers’ Luka Doncic named NBA’s second-most influential European star

An image collage containing 5 images, Image 1 shows A Los Angeles Lakers player in a purple jersey with

There’s no doubt that Luka Doncic is one of the most influential international players the NBA has ever seen. Every time he whips a no-look pass through traffic, or shoots a fadeaway three-pointer while falling out of bounds the crowd erupts. 

But the reaction is just part of the story. And according to a new study, Doncic isn’t even the most influential international player in the NBA today. 

That honor would go to Giannis Antetokounmpo

Doncic finished with the highest positive fan sentiment rating and ranked No. 2 overall behind only the Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo. MediaNews Group via Getty Images

A new study from Betsson ranked Doncic as the second most popular and influential basketball player from Europe over the last five years. 

The study ranked the best European basketball players based off of their team’s winning percentages, global popularity, and positive fan sentiment on social media. The dataset was from 2020 to 2025, and included Google Search volume. 

Giannis finished atop the rankings with a staggering overall score of 96.66 out of 100 behind a 61.9% win percentage, massive global search traffic and a social media positivity score of 61%. 

Doncic was second, posting a 57.2% win rate while generating more than 368,000 monthly Google searches. More telling was Doncic’s 62% positive fan sentiment rating, the highest among every player listed in the study.

Doncic recently finished fourth in the NBA MVP voting and did not receive a single first-place vote. He’s the first NBA scoring leader to not receive a single first-place vote since James Harden in 2020. Many fans are outraged by that fact and believe it’s partly due to his unpopularity among other fanbases. But his positive fan sentiment rating in this study would say otherwise. 

Three-time NBA MVP and 2023 NBA Champion Nikola Jokic finished third, while Victor Wembanyama landed fourth thanks to his exploding popularity despite a lower team win percentage that’s sure to change over the next five years.

Other notable players on the list included Kristaps Porzingis, Rudy Gobert, Lauri Markkanen, Domantas Sabonis, Ivica Zubac, and Deni Avdija.

Every player on the list has become a household name, not only winning on the court, but sparking conversations worldwide off the court. 

As noted by the graphic below, international players are dominating the NBA landscape like never before. The last eight NBA MVP winners have been international players. That trend looks like it’s going to continue as Doncic enters his prime and Wembanyama continues his rise in the sport on both sides of the ball.


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2026 Brewers Minor League Roundup: Week 8

Milwaukee Brewers infielder Jett Williams is pictured before playing a spring training game on March 12, 2026. | Curt Hogg / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Welcome back to the Minor League Roundup!

As a reminder, you can find this roundup — covering everything you need to know about each of the Brewers’ minor league affiliates — every Tuesday morning right here on Brew Crew Ball. For consistency, all organizational prospect rankings will reference MLB Pipeline unless otherwise noted.

Triple-A Nashville Sounds (26-19)

Opponent this week: Iowa Cubs (Chicago Cubs)

Record this week: 6-0

Standout performances:

Luis Lara (No. 5): 9-for-20, 3 RBI, 8 BB, 5 K
Cooper Pratt (No. 4): 8-for-20, 3 2B, 2 HR, 9 RBI, 3 BB, 3 K
Jett Williams (No. 3): 6-for-16, 1 2B, 2 3B, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 5 BB, 4 K
Garrett Stallings: 6 2/3 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 6 K
Tyson Hardin (No. 17): 7 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 3 BB, 6 K

Tyson Hardin’s name appearing here isn’t an error on my part — he was promoted to Triple-A Nashville on Sunday. Hardin had been struggling in Double-A, especially compared to his breakout season last year, pitching to a 7.29 ERA over seven starts with the Shuckers. However, his first start with the Sounds was a massive improvement, as Hardin went seven innings while allowing just one earned run against the Iowa Cubs.

Garrett Stallings, Kaleb Bowman, and Thomas Pannone (remember him?), all had scoreless weeks. Robert Gasser, who made his season debut with the Brewers on Sunday, went four innings, allowing one earned run and striking out seven.

Infield prospects Cooper Pratt (.400) and Jett Williams (.375) each had a pair of home runs. After this week, Pratt’s OPS is now up to .745. He’ll have good stretches and bad stretches as the bat continues to develop, but it’s nice to see him raking after a somewhat rough couple of weeks.

Luis Lara continues to do Luis Lara things, reaching base in 17 of 28 plate appearances. Enough said. His breakout is for real; the question is whether or not there’s a spot for him this year. As Pat Murphy has said, Lara will need to play regularly when he comes up, and with Jackson Chourio and Christian Yelich back, there’s less room in the lineup than there was a month ago.

Brock Wilken had another down week, bringing his average down to .174 on the season. He struggled to hit for average last year in Double-A, but he was consistently hitting home runs. Those have been hard to come by in Triple-A, as he has just two all season. Jeferson Quero also had an off-week (4-for-21), although he homered and only struck out twice.

Next week’s opponent: @ Durham Bulls (Tampa Bay Rays)

Double-A Biloxi Shuckers (17-21)

Opponent this week: Montgomery Biscuits (Tampa Bay Rays)

Record this week: 3-3

Standout performances:

Mark Coley II: 6-for-16, 1 HR, 5 RBI, 2 BB, 6 K
Mike Boeve: 9-for-25, 1 2B, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 1 BB, 4 K
Mark Manfredi Sr.: 4 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 8 K
Manuel Rodriguez: 5IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 3 K
Tanner Gillis: 4 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 2 K
Brett Wichrowski: 5 2/3 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 7 K

Mike Boeve (.360) and Mark Coley II (.375) were the only Shuckers to hit above .300 this week. Boeve, ranked a top 10 organizational prospect at the start of last season, is quietly heating up — slashing .294/.368/.471 (.839 OPS) in 85 at-bats over the last month. The only Shucker with a higher OPS in as many at-bats is outfielder Damon Keith, who has the second-best OPS (.954) and the best batting average (.305) on the team.

Coley II, signed as a minor league free agent after the Marlins cut him in April, is a new name in the roundup — mostly because he hasn’t done much all year. He had just five hits entering the week, and even after this week, he’s still hitting 11-for-52 (.212) with an OPS under .600. With that being said, his profile is one the Brewers tend to like, so he’s worth keeping an eye on. Coley is a speedster (64-for-75 in steals for his career) who hit .253 over 249 at-bats with the Marlins’ Double-A affiliate last year.

The new No. 1 overall prospect in baseball, Jesús Made, had another bad batting average week (5-for-24), although he did notch his first multi-homer game as a member of the Brewers organization. Dylan O’Rae (5-for-21), Blake Burke (6-for-25), and Keith (5-for-25) all cooled off this week as well.

Manuel Rodriguez, Tanner Gillis, and Brett Wichrowski all showed up in their starts this week. Jaron DeBerry gave up six earned runs over 12 innings, but struck out 18 batters and issued just three walks.

Next week’s opponent: vs. Birmingham Barons (Chicago White Sox)

High-A Wisconsin Timber Rattlers (20-16)

Opponent this week: South Bend Cubs (Chicago Cubs)

Record this week: 1-4

Standout performances:

Josh Adamczewski (No. 10): 8-for-15, 1 3B, 3 RBI, 2 BB, 2 K
Braylon Payne (No. 12): 7-for-17, 3 2B, 2 HR, 2 RBI, 3 BB, 5 K
Daniel Dickinson (No. 28): 4-for-14, 1 2B, 5 RBI, 2 BB, 7 K
Braylon Owens: 5 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 6 K
Garrett Hodges: 4 1/3 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 5 BB, 5 K
J.D. Thompson (No. 14): 4 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 5 K

Josh Adamczewski hit over .500 on the week and has a 1.038 OPS this season. Nothing out of the ordinary for a guy with one of the prettiest swings in the organization. Hopefully, we’ll get to see him in Double-A this summer.

Braylon Payne hit .412 with a couple of homers. One of them went *checks notes* 460 feet into the right-field bleachers. He’s now up to eight home runs on the season, behind only Andrew Fischer (10).

Speaking of Fischer (No. 6), he’s the reason Payne didn’t even have the longest homer on the Timber Rattlers this week. Fischer only had one hit this week, a 477-foot nuke of a home run. For what it’s worth, he struck out six times in 14 at-bats — at this point, there’s enough of a sample size to where the strikeouts are more than a little concerning. Still, this is his first full season as a member of the organization, and I have confidence that a guy who had a 14.6% strikeout rate in his final season in college will be able to work out the kinks.

Other than Adamczewski and Payne, Daniel Dickinson was the only Timber Rattler to hit over .200 this week (min. 10 at-bats). He hasn’t had a great start to the season (.206 batting average, .574 OPS), so hopefully this is a sign of things to come.

Playing time for Dickinson may be slightly harder to come by in the weeks to follow because No. 2 prospect Luis Peña should be back soon. Peña has officially been cleared to play after missing nearly a month due to a scary incident in a game last month. Per Curt Hogg, he is scheduled to join the Arizona Complex League Brewers sometime this week.

It was a rough week for Wisconsin’s pitching staff, which allowed 74 runs in just five games this week, including 24-plus runs in two separate games this week (yes, you read that right). The Timber Rattlers allowed nine runs or more in all four of their losses, winning 11-6 in their fifth game. One of the bright spots on the pitching staff was 2025 10th-rounder Braylon Owens (3.45 ERA in seven appearances), who put together another solid outing. His ERA leads all Timber Rattlers pitchers this season.

Former second-rounder J.D. Thompson also pitched well after getting lit up for four runs over two innings in his last outing. One really can’t put too much stock in Thompson’s ERA (6.00) given that he’s only pitched nine innings this year, and the underlying stats actually look really good. He hasn’t allowed more than two hits or walks in any outing this year and is striking out more than a batter per inning. Keep an eye on him as he starts to get comfortable in High-A.

Next week’s opponent: @ Great Lakes Loons (Los Angeles Dodgers)

Single-A Wilson Warbirds (19-19)

Opponent this week: Hill City Howlers (Cleveland Guardians)

Record this week: 4-2

Standout performances:

Pedro Ibarguen: 5-for-11, 2 RBI, 1 BB, 5 K
Brady Ebel (No. 13): 7-for-21, 2 2B, 1 RBI, 4 BB, 4 K
Jose Meneses: 5.2 IP, 6 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 5 K
Enderson Mercado: 6.0 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K

Brady Ebel bounced back this week, leading the Warbirds in hits with seven. Nineteen-year-old Pedro Ibarguen, someone I said to keep an eye on a few weeks ago, is now hitting .353/.433/.510 over the last month in his first full season in Single-A. He’s been with the organization since 2023, when he was signed as an international free agent, but is still super young and looks to be developing into a productive player in Wilson.

Another position player who I haven’t given much love to this year is outfielder Jose Anderson, also 19, who hit another home run this week to bring his season total to eight. Anderson is hitting just .172 with a .276 OBP, but he leads the Warbirds in home runs and is tied for second with seven doubles. He needs just three more home runs to tie his career high, set last year in over 200 more plate appearances.

Wilson’s hitting stats weren’t particularly gaudy, but a couple of pitchers put together great weeks. Jose Meneses made two scoreless appearances, allowing six hits but striking out five over 5 2/3 innings. Meneses, a 21-year-old lefty, now has a 1.80 ERA through 20 innings. Enderson Mercado went six innings while allowing four hits and a lone earned run. Jarrett Bonet, named the organization’s Pitcher of the Month in April, allowed four earned runs on four hits in 5 1/3 innings while striking out eight.

Next week’s opponent: vs. Delmarva Shorebirds (Baltimore Orioles)

Player of the Week

Jett Williams, who had a 1.628 OPS this week and a .981 OPS — with five home runs — over the last month. If the Brewers decide they want more offense out of the left side of the infield than Luis Rengifo, Joey Ortiz, and David Hamilton are currently providing, the versatile Williams figures to be the next man up. He probably wouldn’t be the everyday shortstop, but a super-utility role — one that gets his bat in the lineup more often than not — isn’t out of the question. Even if he doesn’t reach the majors until later this season, it’s encouraging to see the Brewers’ No. 3 prospect heating up after a slow start.

Play of the Week

It’s only May, but Jordyn Adams may have already made the play of the year:

Brewers 9, Cubs 3: Shōta Imanaga implodes and the long home winning streak ends

Shōta Imanaga has been so good this year that I think all of us hoped he had turned the page on 2025 and would have a 2024-type season all year.

Until Monday, that was the case. Unfortunately, Imanaga got hit hard and had his worst start of the year (and to be honest, he had a couple of clunkers like this in ‘24, too), and the Cubs’ 15-game home winning streak ended ith a 9-3 defeat at the hands of the Brewers.

Christian Yelich homered in the second to give Milwaukee a 1-0 lead. Now, the wind was blowing out at 15 miles per hour on a warm evening at Wrigley Field, but that one didn’t need any help — it bounced off the right-field video board and measured 409 feet.

The Brewers put four on the board in the fourth and honestly, with a bit of luck Imanaga could have gotten out of that inning scoreless. Milwaukee had five hits in the inning, but the only one hit hard was a two-run double by Sal Frelick. A couple of seeing-eye singles and one that Nico Hoerner couldn’t get an out on produced most of the damage that gave the Brewers a 5-0 lead.

The Cubs couldn’t do anything with Brandon Sproat over the first four innings, even though the first two Cubs hitters of the game, Hoerner and Michael Busch, drew walks. About that, from BCB’s JohnW53:

The Cubs failed to score in the first inning after their first two batters walked.

In their last six games that had begun that way, from April 9, 2022 through July 18, 2025, the Cubs had scored three, six, five, six, five and three runs. They had won five of the games, only lost the next-to-last at home vs. the Padres, 8-7, on April 6 of last year.

The last time they did not score was on May 4, 2021, but they beat the Dodgers at home, 4-3.

So, not scoring in that situation is not only unusual, but the Cubs had generally won games like that in recent years. Not this time, though.

Imanaga was finally removed after serving up a three-run homer to Jake Bauers in the fifth. From John:

The eight runs off Imanaga tie for the second most he has surrendered in his 64 career starts.

He gave up 10 to the Mets in 3.0 innings on June 21, 2024, and eight to the Mets on Sept. 25 in 5.2 innings of last year. Both games were at home.

This was the eighth start in which he gave up at least five runs. His ERA this year was 2.32 going into Monday. Now it is 3.38.

I remember that 2024 game well. If it’s any consolation, in his first five starts after that game, Imanaga posted a 2.93 ERA and threw well most of the rest of 2024.

The Cubs did make an attempt to get back in the game. Carson Kelly’s single leading off the fifth erased any thoughts of a no-hit bid by Sproat. After Pete Crow-Armstrong struck out, Dansby Swanson deposited a baseball on Waveland [VIDEO].

That ball was crushed! [VIDEO]

And in case you were wondering where that ball wound up:

There have already been more home runs hit to Waveland this year, in 24 home games, than all of last year, when there were only three.

Nico followed with a walk and Busch doubled him in [VIDEO].

Well. Now it’s 8-3 and there’s only one out, another couple of hits and the Cubs are back in the game. Unfortunately, Alex Bregman grounded out and Ian Happ was called out on strikes to end the inning.

The Brewers made it 9-3 off Ethan Roberts in the sixth, the first run Roberts has allowed all year.

The Cubs put newcomer Ty Blach in the game in the seventh. He wound up throwing three scoreless innings, helped out by this nice throw by Happ to get Luis Rengifo trying to stretch a single into a double [VIDEO].

Blach did exactly the job the Cubs put him on the roster for — to eat up some innings and save the rest of the bullpen. He’s 35 and not likely going to be around for long, but that was a nice effort for the evening.

The Cubs did have some baserunners after the three-run seventh, but nothing doing, and overall the team was 0-for-9 with RISP. You know that’s been an issue much of the year, so I won’t belabor it, especially in a 9-3 blowout.

Here are Craig Counsell’s postgame comments [VIDEO].

I agree with Counsell about Imanaga’s command being the issue. Hopefully this is something that can be addressed quickly and he can turn it around in his next start.

One last note on this game from John:

This was the Cubs’ 100th regular-season game at home vs. the Brewers in which they allowed at least five runs.
They are 28-72 in those games.

When they have given up no more than four runs, the Cubs are 91-39 — .700.

The Cubs are 74-21, .779, when they have scored at least five vs. the Brewers at Wrigley, and 45-89, .336, with four or fewer.

The Cubs’ lead in the NL Central over the Brewers dropped to half a game with this loss (and Milwaukee is one game ahead in the loss column). And this series is not going to get any easier with Jacob Misiorowski on the mound for Milwaukee Tuesday evening. Ben Brown will get the start for the Cubs and he’s been really good in his two starts so far this year. Game time is again 6:40 p.m. CT and TV coverage will be via Marquee Sports Network.

Who is the Phillies’ biggest player development win?

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 16: Cristopher Sánchez #61 of the Philadelphia Phillies celebrates with teammates in the dugout after pitching a complete game in a 6-0 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates during the game at PNC Park on May 16, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s getting harder and harder to argue against the belief that Cristopher Sánchez is one of the best pitchers in baseball. The Phillies ace lefty turned in one of the most dominant outings of the season so far in his last start, a complete game shutout with 13 strikeouts on 108 pitches. That dazzling performance lowered Sánchez’ season ERA to 1.82 which led the National League on Monday morning and was the fourth best in all of baseball. 

It’s funny to think now how disliked the trade that brought Sánchez to the Phillies was at the time it was made. As you’re probably well aware of by now, the Phillies traded a then top 100 prospect in Curtis Mead for Sánchez who, at the time, was deemed not worthy of the Tampa Bay Rays 40-man roster. Many evaluators believed that Sánchez’ ceiling was that of either a reliever or AAAA-type starter who would be destined to bounce back and forth from the Major and minor leagues. 

Sánchez deserves the lion’s share of the credit for his transformation from a fringe of the roster body into one of the best pitchers in baseball. He put in the work to improve himself physically and mentally to achieve a ceiling many thought not possible. But the Phillies deserve some credit too, as they helped him along in his journey and were able to successfully develop a homegrown ace. 

That brings us to our question of the day: Who is the Phillies’ biggest player development win? Sánchez may be the favorite, but the last winning core in Philadelphia also had some players that exceeded expectations. Ryan Howard of course was a fifth-round pick that turned into one of the most feared hitters across the league, but he was considered a first-round talent in some circles. Carlos Ruiz was never even close to a highly touted prospect, but under the Phillies tutelage he turned into a mainstay at catcher for a championship team while also guiding one of the best rotations in baseball history.

Who are some other huge development wins in Phillies history? Is Sánchez the biggest? What about Howard and Ruiz? 

Was that the least competitive game the Braves will lose this year?

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 18: Ronald Acuna Jr. #13 of the Atlanta Braves stands on the field after coming off of the IL before the game against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot park on May 18, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Kelly Gavin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s funny that it happened yesterday for two reasons, at least to me.

First, in the recap thread for Sunday’s game, there was a brief exchange about non-competitive games. Using a couple of different methodologies, True2Atlanta and I noted that there have only been four-ish games where the Braves weren’t competitive. I did a method that used average leverage throughout the game, and found that about 40 percent of games this season have been below-average in competitiveness basically all the way through, but 80 percent of those were Braves wins/dominations.

Second, Sunday’s game was the first time this season I missed a few innings. I did it “deliberately,” in the sense that the Braves had a big lead and I surmised I wouldn’t miss anything at all if I went to deal with “you’ve recently been in a car wreck” stuff. Yesterday’s game, well… there wasn’t really any reason to watch the horror show descend on Bummer and company.

Anyway, was last night rock bottom in terms of single-game dismantling of the Braves, or are we somehow going to be in for even worse somewhere in the 100ish remaining games of the season?

Tuesday Morning Texas Rangers Update

May 18, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Texas Rangers assistant pitching coach Dave Bush (89) looks on in the fourth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

Good morning.

Shawn McFarland writes that poor defense was the main culprit for the Texas Rangers dropping the series opener against the Colorado Rockies.

McFarland writes that Josh Jung in particular felt responsible for the defeat to Colorado after Jung’s error led to two runs scoring in a one-run loss.

Kennedi Landry writes that the game felt adverse from the start as Texas lost MacKenzie Gore to a muscle ailment after just one inning in the chilly conditions.

McFarland notes that Gore didn’t seem to think his injury was serious but the lefty will surely require more monitoring.

In addition to whatever the heck happened to Gore, Landry notes that Corey Seager finally landed on the IL proper yesterday after already missing several games with a back issue.

And, Matt Snyder has a power rankings for CBS sports but it’s mostly about how teams leaguewide have been bad and/or disappointing in what has been a very unusual season thus far.

Have a nice day!